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Angular 2 Cookbook

You're reading from   Angular 2 Cookbook Discover over 70 recipes that provide the solutions you need to know to face every challenge in Angular 2 head on

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785881923
Length 464 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Matthew Frisbie Matthew Frisbie
Author Profile Icon Matthew Frisbie
Matthew Frisbie
Patrick Gillespie Patrick Gillespie
Author Profile Icon Patrick Gillespie
Patrick Gillespie
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Strategies for Upgrading to Angular 2 FREE CHAPTER 2. Conquering Components and Directives 3. Building Template-Driven and Reactive Forms 4. Mastering Promises 5. ReactiveX Observables 6. The Component Router 7. Services, Dependency Injection, and NgModule 8. Application Organization and Management 9. Angular 2 Testing 10. Performance and Advanced Concepts

Implementing Promise barriers with Promise.all()


You may find your application requires the use of promises in an all-or-nothing type of situation. That is, it will need to collectively evaluate a group of promises, and this collection will resolve as a single promise if and only if all of the contained promises are resolved; if any one of them is rejected, the aggregate promise will be rejected.

Note

The code, links, and a live example of this are available at http://ngcookbook.herokuapp.com/8496/ .

How to do it...

The Promise.all() method accepts an iterable collection of promises (for example, an array of Promise objects or an object with a number of promise properties), and it will attempt to resolve all of them as a single aggregate promise. The parameter of the aggregate resolved handler will be an array or object that matches the resolved values of the contained promises:

var outerResolveA, outerResolveB; 
const promiseA = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { 
  outerResolveA...
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